Monday, 6 December 2010

Interview with 'Monsters' editor


Interesting interview with insights about film making on a small scale...



http://www.bfi.org.uk/live/video/531


Also a youtube video recommended by the editor explaining how film effects are done



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBeHljB6uFU





UK Film Council Website


The UK Film Council distribute funds from the National Lottery to support film making in the UK. The Council will be disbanded as part of the new Govt. plans. How might this affect film making in the UK and the British Film Industry?

http://www.ukfilmcouncil.org.uk/

Consumption-Box Office Stats


http://www.ukfilmcouncil.org.uk/weekendboxoffice

Monday, 29 November 2010

Film in the UK


The UK Film Council Statistical Yearbook-exactly what we need!

Essential information about film consumption in the UK. Really useful for information about audiences

http://sy10.ukfilmcouncil.ry.com/

Vertigo Films-UK Distributor





http://www.vertigofilms.com/home.php

'Monsters' on IMDB




Look at the production companies involved...

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1470827/

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1470827/companycredits

Magnolia Pictures





This is the company responsible for producing 'Monsters'. Vertigo Films are the distributors in the UK



http://www.magpictures.com/

'Monsters'-Wiki entry


Take note of the information under the 'Production' heading-useful case study facts!



'Monster' Official website


US Website
UK Website
Are there any differences between the two websites? What might this suggest about the differences between US and UK audiences? What might this suggest about the two film industries?
Why are there two websites in the first place?!


'Monsters'-Bedroom Blockbuster


http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2010/nov/27/mosters-gareth-edwards-avatar






Section B Prezi!

Monday, 22 November 2010

TV Drama and Representation of Disability

Extract: Casualty (BBC)
Answer the question below, with detailed reference to specific examples from the extract only.
Discuss the ways in which the extract constructs representations of disability using the following:
• Camera shots, angles, movement and composition
• Editing
• Sound
• Mise-en-scene

TV Drama and Representation of Regional Indentity

TV Drama and Representation of Disability

How is the representation of disability constructed in the following extract?


Monday, 15 November 2010

Exam board advice-editing!

EDITING AND REPRESENTATION
As a technical code, editing is primarily related to narrative, and many students struggle to make connections between editing and representation.
They see how camera-work – such as close-ups and low angles – conveys status and emotion to the audience. The use of costume, props and settings – functions of mise en scène – are also pretty transparent to most students.
But what does match-on-action have to do with character or your penis?
This list is designed to help you to start thinking about how editing can, if sometimes subtly, influence the audience’s reading of a character, and lead on to wider questions of representation. It is not an exhaustive list, and you should be wary of assuming these suggestions are either a) complete or b) foolproof - in the same way that black and white don’t always represent good and evil (just ask a penguin). The role of editing in representation is open to interpretation, and is greatly dependent on context. So use your intelligence!

Action match
When following a single character (e.g. Billy Elliot dancing) this is a purely technical device. However, when an action match is used for intercutting, it can heighten the parallels/contrasts between two different characters in two different situations – an opportunity for juxtaposition.
eg: in Skins, the young Russian woman’s swinging of the axe – all sex and power – is juxtaposed with the fat Russian dinnerlady’s heavy serving of congealed mashed potato. It draws attention to the contrasting ways in which Russian women are being represented.

Eyeline match
Eyeline match usually provides insight to a character's private thoughts.
eg: In Doctor Who: Last of the Time Lords, Martha exchanges glances with all the people she loves, as though this may be the last chance she has to communicate with them before she dies. Similarly, as she confronts the Master, we keep cutting from her to the family and friends watching her, signifying that she, the woman, is the centre of the action.

Final shot
In any scene, which character or characters are shown in the final shot of the sequence? This is often the character with whom the audience is expected to identify.
eg: In Primeval, although Abby saves the day, the last shot is on Cutter, signifying that the audience is intended to adopt the male, not female, point of view. See also every EastEnders cliffhanger ever.

Intercutting: juxtaposition
Although typically a narrative device, intercutting can set up juxtaposition between parallel storylines, exaggerating the impact or meaning of each by highlighting a point of difference. eg: in EastEnders: Wedding Night, the warmth, light and music of the happy pre-wedding feast is in stark contrast with the two unhappy families represented in the cold and dark whenever we cut away. This provides a more favourable representation of Asian family life over white Londoners.

Intercutting: tension
When intercutting is used to draw two storylines together, this can be structured to create tension, and therefore heighten the audience;’s identification with a particular character.
eg: in Primeval, intercutting between the tiger’s pursuit of Cutter and Abby’s running in with the rifle is action code and prompts the question: will she get there in time? In Hotel Babylon, intercutting offers both tension and
juxtaposition: just as Adam is saving his colleague’s life with a jar of jam, another African immigrant, Ibrahim, is being lost. The tension and juxtaposition lead the audience to identify with both characters.

Jump cuts
These are rarely used in TV or film; when they are, they tend to suggest either a) chaos and disorder, b) self-conscious ellipsis (drawing attention to the rapid pace of the action) or c) a director who likes to break the rules!
eg: In Primeval, two jump cuts accelerate Cutter’s preparation to slide down the zip-wire; this could be read as speedy and decisive.

Motivation
A motivated edit is any transition ‘forced’ on the editor by the development of the action, nar-rative or character. Whenever shot (a) refers to the existence of an event outside the frame, and we then cut to (b) which shows that event, that’s a motivated edit. We can sometimes judge a character’s worth or importance by the number of cuts they motivate.
eg: In Primeval, Cutter runs away from the tiger, drawing it away from Abby.
His constant motion motivates many of the cuts in this sequence, again reinforcing his status as the protagonist, if not the Proppian hero.

Pace of editing
This can imply character qualities, especially if only one or two characters are in the se-quence. A fast pace might suggest energy or panic (depending on context) while infrequent cuts (long takes) might suggest calm, a casual attitude, or provide documentary-style realism (as in Cast Offs). Similar effects can be achieved with speed ramping and slow-motion.

Prevalence
How much screen time does a character get? The more time we see them on screen, the more important their role. This can develop during a scene to change characters’ status.
eg: in Hotel Babylon, Adam is invisible – just one of many refugees – until he steps forward to treat the diabetic maid. Suddenly, the editing favours him, and we realise his importance and skill, despite his menial status in the hotel..

Selection: to show or not to show
As experienced film-makers yourselves, it can sometimes be interesting to ask what informa-tion has been included or omitted in an edit.
eg: in Primeval, as Jenny comes under increased threat from West, at no point do we cut away to her colleagues approaching the barn. To do so might have reduced the tension in the scene; not doing so arguably increases Jenny’s apparent vulnerability. Narratively, it’s also a nice surprise when the team arrive in a single cut, which contrasts with the early tiger chase (see intercutting).

Shot/reverse shot and reaction shots
S/RS indicates the relationship between two characters: it signifies and sometime exagger-ates their closeness – or their opposition (depending on the context). The amount of time given to a character’s reaction shots can convey their status in the scene. For example, if two character are in S/RS conversation, do they get equal screen time, or do we spend more time looking at one character, speaking and reacting? Equally (though this is also a function of camera, are the two characters framed equally?
eg: in Doctor Who, the S/RS between Martha and the Master gives Martha CUs and the Master MCUs, conveying Martha’s greater status as a character, even if narratively she appears defeated.

Friday, 28 May 2010

Continuity Systems-Preliminary Task

180 degree rule-Match on action-shot/reverse shot

Preliminary Exercise:Continuity task involving filming and editing a character opening a door, crossing a room and sitting down in a chair opposite another character, with whom she/he then exchanges a couple of lines of dialogue. This task should demonstrate match on action, shot/reverse shot and the 180 degree rule.




Technical elements of the Moving Image-Editing

EDITING

Editing – the stage in the film-making process in which sound and images are organised into an overall narrative.

Continuity Editing – the most common type of editing, which aims to create a sense of reality and time moving forward. Also nick named invisible editing referring to how the technique does not draw attention to the editing process.

Jump Cut – An abrupt, disorientating transitional device in the middle of a continuous shot in which the action is noticeably advanced in time and/or cut between two similar shots, usually done to create discontinuity for artistic effect.

Credits – the information at the beginning and end of a film, which gives details of cast and crew etc.

Cross Cutting – the editing technique of alternating, interweaving, or interspersing one narrative action (scene, sequence or event) with another – usually in different locations or places, thus combining the two: this editing technique usually suggests Parallel action (that takes place simultaneously). Often used to dramatically build tension and/or suspense in chase scenes or to compare two different scenes. Also known as inter-cutting or parallel editing. Check out this amazing example from Coppola's 'The Godfather' (NOTE-NOT THE ORIGINAL MUSIC!!)



Cutaways – A brief shot that momentarily interrupts continuous action by briefly inserting another related action, object, or person (sometimes not part of the principle scene or main action), followed by a cutback to the original shot. Often used in TV Drama to show a character's reaction

Freeze Frame – the effect of seemingly stopping a film in order to focus in on one event or element.

Eye-line Match – a type of edit which cuts from one character to what that character has been looking at. Look at this example here (around 30 seconds in)





Flashback – a scene or moment in a film in which the audience is shown an event that happened earlier in the film’s narrative.

Graphic Match – an edit effect in which two different objects of the same shape are dissolved from one into the other. A famous graphic match from Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey'



Juxtaposition – the placement of two (often opposed) images on either side of an edit to create an effect.

Linear Narrative – a style of storytelling in which events happen chronologically.

Montage Editing – the juxtaposition of seemingly unconnected images in order to create meaning.

Parallel Editing – a type of editing in which events in two locations are cut together, in order to imply a connection between the two sets of events.

Visual Effects - visual effects are usually used to alter previously-filmed elements by adding, removing or enhancing objects within the scene.

Match on Action - A shot that emphasises continuity of space and time by matching the action of the preceding shot with the continuation of the action. (For example a shot of a door opening after a shot of a close up of a character’s hand turning a door handle)

Textual Analysis-Pride and Prejudice

In this extract Mr Darcy appears to think himself socially superior to those around him. How does the extract construct this representation through editing?


Textual Analysis-Waterloo Road

Discuss the way in which the representation of class and status are constructed in the clip from 'Waterloo road'.

Textual Analysis-Clocking Off

Look at the use of camera in this clip. What effects do the different uses of camera create?

Textual Analysis-The Ball Cruncher

The clip represents gender through the female character who is introduced in the first few minutes. She is portrayed as a scary, dominant woman (as suggested through the episode's title!) Give specific examples of how camera and sound construct this particular (fairly humorous!) representation...


Technical Elements of the Moving Image-Mise-en-scene

Look at this still image from a 'Being Human' promotional pack. There are lots of clues and references to spot all constructed through props and set design.
Go to this link for a bigger version









Technical Elements of the Moving Image-Mise-en-scene






Mise-en-scene-French for 'put in the scene'. Refers to all the elements organised in pre-production and before filming starts e.g. location/production design (the look of a set)/props/costumes/lighting

These elements will suggest a great deal to the audience about how characters are being represented. You can analyse still images and make statements about how characters are being constructed through mise-en-scene and camera (shot/composition/framing)


Thursday, 27 May 2010

Technical elements of the Moving Image-Sound

Diegetic sound-sound that is part of the 'world' of the clip. Sound that matches the images on screen. An example of diegetic sound would be 'ambient sound'. Ambient sound or ambient audio means the background sounds which are present in a scene or location. Common ambient sounds include wind, water, birds, crowds, office noises, traffic, etc.

Ambient sound is very important in video and film work. It performs a number of functions including:




  • Providing audio continuity between shots.
  • Preventing an unnatural silence when no other sound is present.
  • Establishing or reinforcing the mood.

Sound effects-often used in TV drama to draw the audience's attention to something. Note how the sound of the bus has been amplified in post-production at the sound mixing stage in the clip from 'Skins' posted earlier

Non-diegetic sound-sounds that are not 'natural' to the text e.g. musical score (in film), incidental music (music in TV), sound motif (musical phrases that relate to characters/emotions/moods)




In this clip from 'Lost' note the use of incidental music and the focus pull to make the audience focus on his feet!



In this clip at the very beginning there is a sound motif used in 'Lost' to let the audience know that there's a flashback.


Sting -Either a brief crescendo stab of music used to enhance the drama of the current situation just before an Act Break (called a "dramatic sting" when used this way), or a brief comical stab on music to enhance a punchline at the end of a scene (most famously, the so-called "rimshot" — ba-dum-bum-ching).


Sound bridge-refers to an outgoing sound (either dialogue or sound effects) in one scene that continues over into a new image or shot - in this case, the soundtrack, not a visual image, connects the two shots or scenes.



Note the use of sound in this Dr Who clip. Much more like a film score

Dialogue/Voiceover-dialogue can tell us a lot about representations. What do the characters say and what does this reveal about them?

All these elements together are collectively referred to as the soundtrack

Examples of aural horror from 'Clip Joint'

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/2010/jul/07/clip-joint-shocking-sounds

Sound bridge-sound continues from one frame to the next, 'bridging' the two frames

Cinematic Terms-Covers everything and more!




Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Canted angle-a shot made with the camera leaned to one side and filming at a diagonal angle. Not very often seen in TV Drama but...


The canted angle is a camera shot in which the camera is deliberately slanted to one side. This can be used for dramatic effect and helps portray unease, disorientation, frantic or desperate action, intoxication, madness, etc.


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Zoom-Reverse Zoom-self explanatory! Not often used in TV Drama as it is a very obvious use of the camera and would detract from the sense of realism most TV Dramas are trying to create. When used in TV Drama it would usually be to draw the audiences' attention to something important within the scene.

Check out this video with examples of a combination of a camera zoom and a tracking shot in the opposite direction! Creates a weird effect. First used by Hitchcock in 'Vertigo'

Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Hand-held-self explanatory! Used a lot in horror/thriller/action films. Perhaps even used too much here in 'The Blair Witch Project'




Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Steadicam-this shot is named after the equipment used to get it.






a hand-held camera technique using a stabilizing Steadicam (introduced in the late 70s), with a special, mechanical harness that allows the camera operator to take relatively smooth and steady shots, though hand-held, while moving along with the action; the resulting images are comparable to normal tracking shots on a wheeled dolly

This clip from Stanley Kubrick's 'The Shining' make use of a steadicam to film the boy on his go-kart going down the corridor




Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Tilt shot-the camera moves on a vertical axis up or down. Commonly down to up! Often used to suggest power or menace e.g. a small child looking up an adult




Look at this student project and an example, among others, of a swish tilt- a faster tilt!

Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Tracking shot-the camera moves on tracks and follows the action. Sometimes referred to as a 'dolly shot' after the equipment the camera is mounted on.




From Martin Scorcese's 'Goodfellas'-one of the longest and most famous tracking shots in cinema



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1mHtkpkxiA



Also check out this from David Fincher's 'Panic Room'





Look at this selection from the Guardian's 'Clip Joint' series-use of the long take in films

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/2009/jan/05/1

Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Camera movement-pan. The camera remains in a fixed position and moves left-right or right-left. Check out this from Alfred Hitchcock's film 'Rope'. Hitchcock deliberately tried to avoid using cuts so uses camera movement instead to move the narrative on.



Wednesday, 26 May 2010

Film Dictionary




Useful link with some helpful defintions and example images


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Focus pull-the camera focus changes-see the video below. This technique draws the audience's attention to certain elements within the frame-directs our attention.
The focus pull (AKA rack focus) is a creative camera technique in which you change focus during a shot. Usually this means adjusting the focus from one subject to another.





The focus pull is useful for directing the viewer's attention. For example, if there are two people in shot but only one is in focus, that person is the subject of attention. If the focus changes to the other person, they become the subject. This is often used in drama dialogues — the focus shifts backwards and forwards between the people speaking. A slightly more subtle trick is to focus on a person speaking then pull focus to another person's silent reaction.

Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Shallow focus-not all elements of the shot are in focus. The effect draws the audience's attention to the subject in focus-something the director needs us to notice



Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Deep focus-all the elements in the frame are in focus


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Rule of thirds-part of the composition/framing of a shot

What is the Rule of Thirds?
The basic principle behind the rule of thirds is to imagine breaking an image down into thirds (both horizontally and vertically) so that you have 9 parts



With this grid in mind the ‘rule of thirds’ now identifies four important parts of the image that you should consider placing points of interest in as you frame your image. Not only this – but it also gives you four ‘lines’ that are also useful positions for elements in your photo.


The theory is that if you place points of interest in the intersections or along the lines that your photo becomes more balanced and will enable a viewer of the image to interact with it more naturally. Studies have shown that when viewing images that people’s eyes usually go to one of the intersection points most naturally rather than the center of the shot – using the rule of thirds works with this natural way of viewing an image rather than working against it.Read more: http://digital-photography-school.com/rule-of-thirds#ixzz0p2iJx71M

Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Low angle-the shot is composed with the camera below the subject or at a low level. The effect makes the subject appear bigger in the frame. Used to suggest the reverse of the high angle!


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

High angle-camera is above or higher than the subject. The effect in the frame is to make the subject seem smaller. Often used to reflect power in relationships or to make the subject seem smaller/inferior/vulnerable


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Over the shoulder shot-like it says! Again a technical convention commonly used in TV Drama as it helps construct the idea of characters in conversation. Makes it seem more realistic


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Point-of-View shot-used to show a particular character's point of view. Enables the audience to empathise with that character.


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Two-shot-often seen in TV Drama as it is a technical convention used when filming dialogue


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Long shot-using the body as guide again, a full body shot


Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera


Close-up-generally used to show a character's reaction/in order that the audience can focus on information crucial to the narrative.



Mid-shot-from the waist up

Technical elements of the Moving Image-Camera

Camera shots

Establishing Shot-to establish information for the audience. Commonly location but could also be the time when the text is set.

Master Shot-to reference a specific location understood by the audience as belonging to the 'world' of the text. Indicates where the action is about to take place.







Representation of age-Monarch of the Glen


Watch from 2 minutes to 5 minutes

Representation of regional identity-'Shameless'

How does it represent a working class family from Northern England?


http://www.youtube.com/show?p=J_Vjg63aqj4&s=1

Representation of sexuality

http://www.youtube.com/show/sugarrush




Representation of ethnicity

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yw68eolT39A

Representation of disability

http://www.youtube.com/show?p=XOhyyi9UXB4&s=2